Postdoctoral fellow in Computable Semantics for the Tree of Life

2015-05-06 Thread Hilmar Lapp
Hi all, We are looking for a postdoctoral fellow in computable semantics for a project, called phyloreferencing in short, that has been newly funded by the US National Science Foundation. If you know someone who might be interested in developing mechanisms for utilizing OWL semantics and machine

Re: FHIR RDF ordered list preferences?

2015-05-06 Thread Jim McCusker
Another alternative is PROV-DICTIONARY: http://www.w3.org/TR/2013/NOTE-prov-dictionary-20130430/ Lists are a special case of mappings, especially if you've already conceded the use of explicit indices. Two possible benefits here are that a) it's already part of an accepted standard (but is itself

Re: FHIR RDF ordered list preferences?

2015-05-06 Thread David Booth
Property paths help for some queries, but it is still hard to query all items in a list (of unknown length) and get them back *in order*. See the explanation here: http://goo.gl/8PNuAG#heading=h.r5k2cm3j5iua David Booth On 05/06/2015 04:27 PM, Jim McCusker wrote: Lists aren't that bad anymor

Re: FHIR RDF ordered list preferences?

2015-05-06 Thread Jim McCusker
Lists aren't that bad anymore in SPARQL, now that property paths are available: http://www.snee.com/bobdc.blog/2014/04/rdf-lists-and-sparql.html Jim On Wed, May 6, 2015 at 4:25 PM David Booth wrote: > In defining the RDF representation of FHIR data, we need to maintain > element ordering in som

FHIR RDF ordered list preferences?

2015-05-06 Thread David Booth
In defining the RDF representation of FHIR data, we need to maintain element ordering in some cases, both because ordering can be semantically relevant (such as listing someone's preferred mailing address first in a list of addresses), and to support round-tripping of FHIR RDF data back to FHIR

Re: Good, up-to-date tutorial on OWL 2 and Protege for Biomedical domain?

2015-05-06 Thread Phillip Lord
Oliver Ruebenacker writes: > The challenge of building ontologies is not technical, but > socio-political. I think this very much depends on the ontology that you are creating and what it's purpose is. When we created the karyotype ontology, there was no socio-political challenge at all; the kn

Re: Ontology to link food and diseases

2015-05-06 Thread Marco Brandizi
Hi Lars, thanks for your suggestion. Yes, Nanopublications or Annotation Ontology (http://code.google.com/p/annotation-ontology/) would be good to model supporting evidence. Best, Marco. On 06/05/2015 16:07, Svensson, Lars wrote: Hi Marco, This sounds like a use case for nanopublications

11th Reasoning Web Summer School (RW 2015) - "Web Logic Rules"

2015-05-06 Thread Adrian Paschke
Application Deadline - May 10th, 2015 ** CALL FOR APPLICATIONS The 11th Reasoning Web Summer School (RW 2015) Berlin, Germany, July 31 - August 4, 2015 http://reasoningweb.org/2015 ** co-located with: - 9th